Erich Maria Remarque

Writer 1898 – 1970
Steady
#901
Historical Importance
331K
2025 Wikipedia Views
-5.6%
Year-over-Year
-8%
2025 Momentum

📈 2025 Monthly Wikipedia Views

About Erich Maria Remarque

Erich Maria Remarque (1898–1970) was a German author whose enduring historical importance stems largely from his searing anti-war literature, most famously All Quiet on the Western Front. As a survivor of World War I, his novel provided an unflinching, visceral account of trench warfare from the perspective of a young German soldier, profoundly shaping the post-war cultural narrative regarding conflict and disillusionment. This significant cultural impact solidifies his place at #901 in MIT’s Historical Popularity Index, reflecting his deep resonance across languages and time.

In the modern digital landscape, Remarque's attention appears relatively muted compared to his historical standing. He garnered approximately 331K Wikipedia views in 2025, placing his attention nearly on par with his importance, indicated by his ~1x Attention Gap. This level of digital focus means he receives roughly one-third the attention of contemporary writers like Isaac Asimov (#920 importance, 1.6M views) or Virginia Woolf (#929 importance, 1.4M views), despite a similar historical ranking. Furthermore, figures with vastly higher historical significance, such as Louis XVIII of France (#454 importance), are significantly more overlooked online, drawing only 48K views.

Observing short-term trends, Remarque's online presence shows a slight contraction; the annualized view count for 2025 declined by -5.6% year-over-year, and momentum between the first and third quarters dropped by -8%, suggesting a minor, gradual drift away from his literary output in current internet search activity.

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